US Vice President Mike Pence condemned Myanmar's persecution of the Rohingya ethnic group in front of the country's leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, in Singapore on Wednesday.
Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters

US Vice President Mike Pence and Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi held an awkward bilateral meeting in Singapore on Wednesday.

Pence condemned the Myanmar military's ongoing attacks against the Rohingya Muslims, which has seen 700,000 stateless Rohingya fleeing the country.

Myanmar's security forces have since last August waged a massive campaign against the ethnic group. The UN reported this year that soldiers shot and stabbed villagers, raped women, and burned homes.

Pence also brought up the jailing of two Reuters journalists who were imprisoned under the country's official-secrets law while reporting a story about the Rohingya last year.

Suu Kyi was stone-faced throughout Pence's remarks and suggested that the two leaders had "different points of view."

US Vice President Mike Pence grilled Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi to her face Wednesday about her country's "violence and persecution" of the Rohingya Muslims and jailing of two journalists, two major human-rights issues plaguing the Southeast Asian nation.

Speaking with Suu Kyi in Singapore on Wednesday, Pence said that he was "anxious" about the Myanmar military's ongoing attacks against the Rohingya in the western Rakhine state and that they were "without excuse."

Myanmar's army launched a massive offensive against the group last August after militant Rohingya targeted the security forces. As a result, 700,000 stateless Rohingya have fled across the country's border into Bangladesh. Tens of thousands are believed to be dead.

According to a United Nations report in August, soldiers shot and stabbed villagers, raped women, and burned homes while driving out thousands of ethnic Rohingya from their homes last September.

A village in Rakhine state burned as a result of the Rohingya violence. Thomson Reuters

Pence goes all in

Referring to the Rohingya crisis, Pence told Suu Kyi:

"This is a tragedy that has touched the hearts of millions of Americans. The violence and persecution by military and vigilantes that resulted in driving 700,000 Rohingya to Bangladesh is without excuse.

"I'm anxious to hear about the progress that you're making, holding those accountable who are responsible for the violence that displaced so many hundreds of thousands and created such suffering, including the loss of life.

"In addition to the impact on the hundreds of thousands affected, we are anxious to hear about the progress of making it possible for the Rohingya to voluntarily come home."

The US vice president's remarks were the Trump administration's strongest rebuke of the Rohingya crisis yet, Reuters reported.

Jailing of journalists

Pence also noted Myanmar's jailing of two Reuters journalists, Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo. They were arrested in Yangon in December on accusations of breaking the country's official-secrets law.

The journalists had been investigating the killing of 10 Rohingya Muslim villagers in Rakhine. Reuters published that report in February.

"In America, we believe in our democratic institutions and ideals, including a free and independent press," Pence said. "And the arrest and jailing of two journalists last fall was deeply troubling to millions of Americans, and I look forward to speaking with you about the premium that we place on a free and independent press."

Myanmar security forces standing guard over Rohingya Muslim men in the Inn Din village. The photo was part of the jailed Reuters journalists' investigation. Thomson Reuters

'We understand our country better'

Suu Kyi, who Reuters said remained stone-faced as Pence spoke, responded by suggesting that she and Pence had "different points of view" but saying "we understand our country better."

"Of course, people have different points of view but the point is that you should exchange those views and learn to understand each other better," she said.

"And, in a way, we can say that we understand our country better than any other country does. And I'm sure you will say the same of yours, that you understand your own country better than anybody else does. So we are in a better position to explain to you what is happening and how we see things panning out."

Dan Himbrechts - Pool/Getty Images

Suu Kyi, once hailed as a champion for democracy during her 21-year house arrest in Myanmar, has been stripped of multiple international honors over her handling of the Rohingya crisis. Last year she became the first person to have her honorary Canadian citizenship revoked.

On Tuesday, Amnesty International withdrew the Ambassador of Conscience award given to Suu Kyi in 2009, saying it was "profoundly dismayed that you no longer represent a symbol of hope, courage, and the undying defense of human rights."

While some critics have called for her 1991 Nobel Peace Prize to be withdrawn, the foundation that oversees the award said it would not do so.